Why Cruelty Works

"The sadism of treating human beings like vermin lies precisely in the recognition that they are not"

Ja Morant #12 of the Memphis Grizzlies watches as teammates warmup ahead of their NBA game against the Toronto Raptors on November 30, 2021 (Photo by Cole Burston/Getty Images)

If you don’t follow the NBA and its most exciting young team—the Memphis Grizzlies, of course—you probably missed this story. Ja Morant, our young superstar (yes, I’m going to say “our,” because I love this team) just came back from an injury and was heckled by a few courtside fans at the game.

Why would they heckle Ja? The Grizzlies were the hottest team in the NBA after Morant sprained his knee. They won 10 out of 12 games without their best player. Then, in his first game back, they struggled and lost to the Oklahoma City Thunder—a team they’d beaten by 73 points (an NBA record) just days before, without Morant.

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Heckling is common. It happens at every game. But this time Morant seemed genuinely distressed. At a postgame press conference Morant said, “I’m just frustrated. Normally, y’all have seen it, when anybody says something negative about me, it fuels me, but, tonight, the remarks from the fans actually hurt. I’m going to do what I normally do and bounce back, and I’m very excited for this next game."

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